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| module ActionController #:nodoc: | |
| class InvalidAuthenticityToken < ActionControllerError #:nodoc: | |
| end | |
| module RequestForgeryProtection | |
| def self.included(base) | |
| base.class_eval do | |
| helper_method :form_authenticity_token | |
| helper_method :protect_against_forgery? | |
| end | |
| base.extend(ClassMethods) | |
| end | |
| # Protecting controller actions from CSRF attacks by ensuring that all forms are coming from the current web application, not a | |
| # forged link from another site, is done by embedding a token based on a random string stored in the session (which an attacker wouldn't know) in all | |
| # forms and Ajax requests generated by Rails and then verifying the authenticity of that token in the controller. Only | |
| # HTML/JavaScript requests are checked, so this will not protect your XML API (presumably you'll have a different authentication | |
| # scheme there anyway). Also, GET requests are not protected as these should be idempotent anyway. | |
| # | |
| # This is turned on with the <tt>protect_from_forgery</tt> method, which will check the token and raise an | |
| # ActionController::InvalidAuthenticityToken if it doesn't match what was expected. You can customize the error message in | |
| # production by editing public/422.html. A call to this method in ApplicationController is generated by default in post-Rails 2.0 | |
| # applications. | |
| # | |
| # The token parameter is named <tt>authenticity_token</tt> by default. If you are generating an HTML form manually (without the | |
| # use of Rails' <tt>form_for</tt>, <tt>form_tag</tt> or other helpers), you have to include a hidden field named like that and | |
| # set its value to what is returned by <tt>form_authenticity_token</tt>. Same applies to manually constructed Ajax requests. To | |
| # make the token available through a global variable to scripts on a certain page, you could add something like this to a view: | |
| # | |
| # <%= javascript_tag "window._token = '#{form_authenticity_token}'" %> | |
| # | |
| # Request forgery protection is disabled by default in test environment. If you are upgrading from Rails 1.x, add this to | |
| # config/environments/test.rb: | |
| # | |
| # # Disable request forgery protection in test environment | |
| # config.action_controller.allow_forgery_protection = false | |
| # | |
| # == Learn more about CSRF (Cross-Site Request Forgery) attacks | |
| # | |
| # Here are some resources: | |
| # * http://isc.sans.org/diary.html?storyid=1750 | |
| # * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery | |
| # | |
| # Keep in mind, this is NOT a silver-bullet, plug 'n' play, warm security blanket for your rails application. | |
| # There are a few guidelines you should follow: | |
| # | |
| # * Keep your GET requests safe and idempotent. More reading material: | |
| # * http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2002/04/24/deviant.html | |
| # * http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec9.html#sec9.1.1 | |
| # * Make sure the session cookies that Rails creates are non-persistent. Check in Firefox and look for "Expires: at end of session" | |
| # | |
| module ClassMethods | |
| # Turn on request forgery protection. Bear in mind that only non-GET, HTML/JavaScript requests are checked. | |
| # | |
| # Example: | |
| # | |
| # class FooController < ApplicationController | |
| # protect_from_forgery :except => :index | |
| # | |
| # # you can disable csrf protection on controller-by-controller basis: | |
| # skip_before_filter :verify_authenticity_token | |
| # end | |
| # | |
| # Valid Options: | |
| # | |
| # * <tt>:only/:except</tt> - Passed to the <tt>before_filter</tt> call. Set which actions are verified. | |
| def protect_from_forgery(options = {}) | |
| self.request_forgery_protection_token ||= :authenticity_token | |
| before_filter :verify_authenticity_token, :only => options.delete(:only), :except => options.delete(:except) | |
| if options[:secret] || options[:digest] | |
| ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn("protect_from_forgery only takes :only and :except options now. :digest and :secret have no effect", caller) | |
| end | |
| end | |
| end | |
| protected | |
| # The actual before_filter that is used. Modify this to change how you handle unverified requests. | |
| def verify_authenticity_token | |
| verified_request? || handle_unverified_request | |
| end | |
| def handle_unverified_request | |
| reset_session | |
| end | |
| # Returns true or false if a request is verified. Checks: | |
| # | |
| # * is the format restricted? By default, only HTML requests are checked. | |
| # * is it a GET request? Gets should be safe and idempotent | |
| # * Does the form_authenticity_token match the given token value from the params? | |
| def verified_request? | |
| !protect_against_forgery? || | |
| request.get? || | |
| form_authenticity_token == form_authenticity_param || | |
| form_authenticity_token == request.headers['X-CSRF-Token'] | |
| end | |
| def form_authenticity_param | |
| params[request_forgery_protection_token] | |
| end | |
| def verifiable_request_format? | |
| !request.content_type.nil? && request.content_type.verify_request? | |
| end | |
| # Sets the token value for the current session. Pass a <tt>:secret</tt> option | |
| # in +protect_from_forgery+ to add a custom salt to the hash. | |
| def form_authenticity_token | |
| session[:_csrf_token] ||= ActiveSupport::SecureRandom.base64(32) | |
| end | |
| def protect_against_forgery? | |
| allow_forgery_protection && request_forgery_protection_token | |
| end | |
| end | |
| end |